Selfie taking tourists and drowned refugees are the muses for some of the figures in a new underwater museum in the Canary Islands

Underwater sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor just got serious. The British diving artist who has created
large underwater sculpture gardens in the waters of Grenada and Mexico. has
just launched a project in the waters of the Canary Islands that acknowledges
the plight of boat people.

While his Caribbean sunken galleries have tended to be playful,
sometimes religious, the newest project of the 41-year old, skewers important
world issues from climate chage to conservation to migration.

Earlier this month he opened the first phase of Museo Atlantico – an art
project he describes as “the first underwater contemporary art museum in Europe
and the Atlantic Ocean.” There are 300 life-sized figures standing at bottom 14
metres down – more are on the way.

“It is still in construction, over 250 more works will be added in
the coming year” the artist told Diver Magazine. “It will be complete in
January 2017.”

The non-polluting
concrete statues are made from casts of real people. And while the models are
living beings, the new inhabitants are not.

There is
a raft filled with escaping migrants who never will make it to land. The artist
says he isn’t eulogizing the dead, but rather shininga spotlight on their plight.

And what
of the tourists taking selfies as they appear to walk along the bottom.Taylor calls it theRubicon where 35 people are walking towards a
gate- it is “ a point of no return or a
portal to another world.” (Crossing the Rubicon references Julius Caesar who
said in 49 BC that when you cross the Rubicon River you can’t come back – it is
the point of no return).

The
concrete is striated so that over time the pieces will be covered in plant life
and schooling fish will live amongst the art pieces.

“We never interfere with the natural development of the works,”
Taylor continued. “The museum is in a protected bay. Each piece is between 1-10
tons, so I am not predicting major disturbance but with you can never be 100%
certain with the sea. Obviously the works won't change like it hasin tropical areas (his installations in the
Caribbean)but will still be colonized.
Just after two weeks we have seen schools of juvenile fish, 2 angel sharks,
several octopus and algae and calcium deposits on the pieces.”

According to the artist the Raft of Lampedusa is “a harrowing depiction of the ongoing humanitarian crisis, referencing French Romantic painter Théodore Géricault's work: The Raft of the Medusa. Drawing parallels between the abandonment suffered by sailors in his shipwreck scene and the current refugee crisis, the work is not intended as a tribute or memorial to the many lives lost but as a stark reminder of the collective responsibiliy of our now global community.”

Taylor says that the main installation, The Rubicon “features a group of 35 people walking towards a gate, a point of no return or a portal to another world.”

The installation is a commission from the Spanish Government.The placement in the waters of Lanzarote is already
boostingtourism and paying dividends.

“It was officially opened
today (March 2nd), several groups of divers from around Europe came over to be
the first people top see the museum,” Taylor told Diver Magazine. ”And on
return we were met on shore by the president of the Canary Islands.”

Lanzarote is known for its year-round warm weather, beaches and volcanic
landscape. It is the third most populous island of the Canary Islands.

“Not sure quite yet what I will do next. Think large and think
deep. I have another underwater project in Bali soon and the possibility of
some works in the Med but yes it seems I will be below the waves for some
time.”

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